TÊTE-À-TÊTE WITH THE LEGENDARY PAULETTE ATTIE
Q: On each of your
radio shows, you sang a song by the guest being interviewed. That's
remarkable. Even unbelievable, considering the great number of celebrities
and stars you interviewed. Do you remember how many songs you had to
learn? Any favorite (s)?
PAULETTE: In addition to singing songs by and with my guests, I
sang songs depicting different eras of American musical theatre, from
operettas and the revue form, to the great book musicals. I sort of knew
many of them, because songs from the musical theatre were "mother's milk
to me," to quote Liza from "My Fair Lady." Well, favorites are almost too
numerous. Cole Porter's "It's De-lovely" continues to be my opening
number for many shows. I sang "It's Better with a Union Man" with the
song's writer, Harold Rome, playing and singing with me. That was a
special treat.
Q: Why did you do that? Strategy? Savoir-faire? Love for music?
Prolific versatility or just fun? There is only one superstar radio
personality who does what you did, years ago. Marianne Partland from the
National Public Radio.
PAULETTE: Love for the music prompted me. Probably I thought I
was knowledgeable in this area, and it would give me a chance to sing
weekly on the radio. And I learned a lot more, especially about the
songwriters, than I thought I knew.
Q: You won the Silver Globe Award playing a French nightclub singer
on TV's The Yanks Are Coming. How did you get the job? You are so
sophisticated for that role. Was it good contact? Talent? Persona? The
Femme Fatale aura of Paulette Attie?
PAULETTE: I arrived early for the audition. This is not usual for
me, but it's a good lesson for all, myself very much included. After the
director heard my audition, he said, "she's the one," and no one came
along afterward to convince him otherwise. I'm not sure what you mean by
"Was it good contact?" I always say that on a scale of 1 to 10 as to what
gets you the job, talent is number 11. Still, it's the quality that most
interests me. It's what challenges the mind and soul of a creative person
and gives the greatest satisfaction, when one taps into that well.
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Maybe you mean that "good
contact," is what gives an artist the opportunity to exhibit his or her
talent...except there are some talents that cannot be denied. Ahhh, Femme
Fatales. My sister Ariana always imagined that I was a femme fatale.
I've since come to think that we give the aura of being a femme fatale
when we really have no need to be one.
Q: And later you had leading roles on General Hospital, Another
World, All My Children, Sesame Street, Mercy or Murder etc. So, Paulette,
do you consider yourself a soap opera queen or "LADY OF THE STAGE"? There
is a big difference here. Right or wrong?
PAULETTE: In today's times, we're mostly allowed to be what and
who we want to be. When on the stage, I'm totally a stage performer, just
as I loved playing the "femme fatale" voice of the French cat Mel Blanc's
voice pursued in the cartoon, "Pepe le Pew."
Q: You played the leading female roles in musicals and operettas:
My Fair Lady, Gypsy, Can-Can, The Merry Widow, La Vie Parisienne and plays
by
Neil Simon, Tennessee Williams and Noel Coward. How in heavens, one woman
and one voice can fit in all these multivariate and multi-complex roles?
This leads me to an adjacent question: Do you have a PAULETTE ATTIE's
personal style. A style or genre you created, or simply you fit
everywhere?
PAULETTE: This gets back to your “talent” question, and to the
matter of passion. I LOVE talent in others and have a passion for finely
written plays, songs, roles. When working on “Everything’s Coming Up
Roses,” from Gypsy, for instance, I started dreaming about it, imagining
what makes the singer, now me, have to sing these words. I think about
the phrasing, how the melody reflects the feelings of the character, etc.
The song becomes a part of my life.
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That song is now part of
who I am, which alters and changes, so I sing it differently now than when
I first performed it in the show. I recently heard a well known standard
given a lack luster performance. “Wait a minute, that song deserves
better,” I said to myself. I’m now working on that song, “The Impossible
Dream,” which I’ll be including in a future cabaret show.
Q: On your award winning weekly radio show, Paulette Attie's
Musical Playbill on WNYC you sang songs by America's greatest
songwriters, who accompanied you on the air. Great names and legends like
Lee Adams, Harold Arlen, Jerry Bock, Cy Coleman, "Yip" Harburg, Sheldon
Harnick, (Although we’ve become friends, Sheldon Harnick wasn’t one of my
guests. You can include Gene Kelly, if you'd like or keep it just to the
songwriters), Burton Lane, Cy Coleman, John Green, Dorothy Fields, Jimmy
Mc Hugh, Arthur Schwartz, Mary Rodgers, Harold Rome, Charles Strouse and
Jule Styne. How did you manage to bring all these fabulous people? Were
they your friends? Did you work with them? I know you are a legend
yourself, a world-class star, Your fame would attract the best of the
best. So was it your fame which brought those legends to your radio show,
or simply, your producers had access to them?
PAULETTE: I had help from a grand gentleman named Dr. Albert
Sirmay, who was Chief Editor at Chappell Music, music publishers, and who
had been a well known composer of operettas. All the songwriters adored
him. If I said, as he told me to, that Dr. Sirmay recommended they be a
guest on my show, they readily agreed. Since I also functioned as the
show’s Producer, I had free reign to choose my guests. I had access to
many of the greats through this wonderful man. I also convinced Dr. Sirmay
to be a guest on my show, which he was reluctant to do. He had a
pronounced accent and hesitated a lot when speaking, while searching for
the correct word. He said he’d only allow his interview on the air if he
approved of it.
Continues on the
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